Close X
Tuesday, November 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

In Cuba, prisoner swap overshadows historic restoration of relations with U.S.

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2014 04:28 PM

    Amazingly, the restoration of diplomatic relations with the United States and the sea of potential consequences that opens up appeared not to be the biggest news story in Cuba.

    The country's most famous newspaper trumpeted a very narrow component of that story Thursday. So did the folks onstage at Havana's jazz festival.

    The big news was the prisoner swap that sent home the so-called Cuban Five. Treated as national heroes for years, the convicted spies returned to a celebratory welcome and a group photo with President Raul Castro decked out in olive-green military garb.

    The communist party organ, Granma, splashed that photo across a front-page story with a quasi-biblical tone: "The Cuban sky, which they dreamt so much to see, was the first to welcome back our heroes. Then it was the sound of the breeze, this feeling of liberty... Eleven million multiplied tears were shed as (Castro) gave the news."

    The paper ran transcripts of the previous day's speeches by both the U.S. and Cuban presidents, both of whom thanked Canada and the Vatican for helping with negotiations.

    Castro's speech, however, emphasized the return of the spies, arrested 16 years ago in connection with helping the Cuban military shoot down two small planes, then added in parentheses a detail about a shift in a 53-year policy: "Also, we agree to the restoration of diplomatic relations."

    The reaction was similar at the art-deco theatre hosting the Havana jazz festival.

    In honour of Cuba's patron saint, Lazarus, a jazz band played a riff off a classic song about Babalu — the Santeria pagan spirit associated with the saint. Someone onstage mentioned the Cuban Five, prompting cheers. The master of ceremonies later brought the crowd to its feet for a standing ovation.

    "'Today is so special because of the return of The Five, and the opening of negotiations with the United States,'" one of the festival-goers, Susan Jackson, quoted the MC as saying.

    "For the Cubans, the first issue right now is people talking about, 'the return of The Five, the return of The Five'.... I don't think most people here have much concept of what re-establishing relations means."

    But Jackson has a few ideas.

    She holds a unique vantage point as an American who's lived in Cuba for two decades — spending nearly half the year there and the other half back home in upstate New York.

    The diplomatic freeze between her native and adoptive countries has posed a litany of logistical challenges in everyday life for the 73-year-old retired schoolteacher:

    — She can't access her U.S. bank account in Cuba, so she relies on a Canadian one — Scotiabank. In an interview Thursday, she repeatedly expressed gratitude to Canada for sticking with Cuba through the years and for, more recently, offering to host the U.S.-Cuba negotiations.

    — Trips home can be stressful. Each year, she flies through Canada. Then she travels by land to the U.S. border, worrying about having her passport revoked or her husband's U.S. green card cancelled. Jackson says she never lies to the customs agents, but doesn't volunteer unnecessary information: "They'll say, 'Oh, you have such a nice tan' — and I'll say, 'Thank you, bye!'"

    — She struggles to get information from the outside world. A self-professed news junkie, Jackson said she's currently reading a two-week-old copy of the Globe and Mail she recently got her hands on. She also manages to score a few staticky minutes each day of Fox News on the TV in her Old Havana apartment.

    — To check emails, she'll head out to a hotel once in a while and pay $10 an hour for Internet access. That's about a week's salary for a Cuban physician, and more than four times the entire $2.30-a-month pension her Cuban husband Rafael, a jazz saxophonist, receives from the state.

    Jackson hopes some of these things might change.

    The deal announced this week specifically mentioned U.S. telecommunications companies building infrastructure; bigger international cash transfers, and access to American banking institutions from the island.

    "I'm thrilled. And I really give thanks to Obama, the Pope, Raul, Canada — everybody who was involved," she said, comparing the news to springtime after a very bleak, long period following the loss of financial support from the old Soviet Union. "I think most Cubans are very, very pleased."

    She said she heard similar gratitude at Wednesday night's jazz show: "People were mentioning that — 'Canada and the Pope.'"

    Still, a prominent Cuban dissident expressed mixed emotions.

    Yoani Sanchez, writing in a blog, said it was far too early to uncork the champagne and scream, "Viva Cuba Libre," especially because the U.S. hadn't extracted any major concessions from the Castro regime.

    She did see cause for optimism that Cuban politics will change.

    "Because the Cuban system is supported — as one of its main pillars — by the existence of a permanent rival. David can't live without Goliath and the ideological apparatus has depended too long on this dispute."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada disappointed U.S. is appealing WTO COOL meat-label ruling

    Canada disappointed U.S. is appealing WTO COOL meat-label ruling
    The United States is appealing a World Trade Organization ruling that found the country's meat-labelling laws discriminate against Canadian beef and pork exports.

    Canada disappointed U.S. is appealing WTO COOL meat-label ruling

    Supreme Court Agrees To Hear 2 Challenges To BC's Impaired Driving Laws

    Supreme Court Agrees To Hear 2 Challenges To BC's Impaired Driving Laws
    VICTORIA — The Supreme Court of Canada has agreed to hear a pair of British Columbia cases involving seven drivers stopped by police at roadside checks.

    Supreme Court Agrees To Hear 2 Challenges To BC's Impaired Driving Laws

    B.C. Lawyer Suspended For Disclosing Client's Confidential Info To Media

    B.C. Lawyer Suspended For Disclosing Client's Confidential Info To Media
    VANCOUVER — Disclosing a client's confidential information during a media interview has resulted in a Vancouver Island lawyer being suspended for professional misconduct.

    B.C. Lawyer Suspended For Disclosing Client's Confidential Info To Media

    BC Government Brings In New Regulations To Cut Back On Police Dog Bites

    BC Government Brings In New Regulations To Cut Back On Police Dog Bites
    VICTORIA — The British Columbia government has introduced new rules for the training and deployment of police dogs months after a report singled out dog bites as the leading cause of injuries

    BC Government Brings In New Regulations To Cut Back On Police Dog Bites

    Christy Clark Says Americans Not Behaving As 'Friends' In Prince Rupert Terminal Project

    Christy Clark Says Americans Not Behaving As 'Friends' In Prince Rupert Terminal Project
    VICTORIA — British Columbia Premier Christy Clark has lashed out at the United States, saying it's trying to impose its own federal purchasing provisions on the construction of a ferry terminal in Canada. 

    Christy Clark Says Americans Not Behaving As 'Friends' In Prince Rupert Terminal Project

    Vancouver Man Booked For Practising Illegal Dentistry Out Of Basement

    Vancouver Man Booked For Practising Illegal Dentistry Out Of Basement
    VANCOUVER — B.C.'s regulatory body for dentists is taking action against a man it claims was practising illegal dentistry in the basement of a Vancouver house.

    Vancouver Man Booked For Practising Illegal Dentistry Out Of Basement